AC Milan are open to selling Rafael Leão this summer for dramatically less than his €175m release clause – and his agents have already been in contact with Arsenal, Chelsea, and Manchester City. With Milan missing out on Champions League football and the player himself publicly declaring he wants a new challenge, this is no longer a rumour cycle. It is a genuine transfer situation, and the question now is which Premier League destination actually makes sense.
According to reports from Calciomercato and corroborated by multiple outlets including OneFootball, Milan’s internal asking price has collapsed from nine-figure valuations to somewhere in the €50–75m range – a figure that transforms Leão from a fantasy target into a realistic acquisition for the Premier League’s top clubs. That shift matters enormously. At €175m, nobody was moving. At €60m, everybody should be paying attention.
What Clubs Are Actually Getting – The Leão Profile
Rafael Leão is 26, left-footed, and built for transition football. He carries the ball at pace from deep positions, beats defenders on the outside with his physical profile, and creates chances through line-breaking rather than combination play. At his peak in 2022–23 he was one of the most destructive left wingers in Europe – direct, explosive, and genuinely unplayable in open space.
The complications are well-documented. His defensive contribution is minimal – coaches who demand high-intensity pressing from their wide forwards have to make a structural accommodation for him or accept that they will not get it. His finishing, relative to his chance volume, has been inconsistent. And his output dipped noticeably in 2024–25 as Milan’s collective form deteriorated and the squad around him thinned out.
What he offers, though – at €50–60m for a player still in his physical prime – is elite ball-carrying, the ability to win games from nothing, and a profile that almost no Premier League club currently has on their left flank. The fit question is not whether he is good enough. It is whether the manager’s system lets him be good enough.
Manchester City – Intriguing but Not the Right Architecture
The interest from Manchester City’s side of this story is understandable. Pep Guardiola has always been drawn to players who can unlock low blocks in the final third, and at his best Leão does exactly that – he is the kind of winger who makes defences look disorganised just by receiving the ball. The Premier League rumours linking City to Leão have some logic behind them.
But here is the complication: Guardiola’s system asks more of wide forwards off the ball than almost any manager in world football. The inverted winger role at City requires constant positional discipline, pressing triggers executed at specific moments, and an understanding of compactness that Leão has never consistently demonstrated. Doku – a player with similar pace-and-power qualities – has had to learn those habits from scratch, and even he has had his difficult periods fitting the structure.
Leão is not a bad footballer. He is a specific kind of footballer. And the specific kind City have historically preferred – technically refined, positionally obedient, tactically coachable – is not quite his profile. At this price he would be worth the gamble for plenty of clubs. For City, the structural ask is too high for a player whose game is built around freedom rather than framework.
Chelsea – Long-Standing Interest, but the Numbers Tell a Complicated Story
Chelsea have been circling Leão since at least 2023, when they explored triggering his then-€150m-plus release clause before he chose to renew with Milan. The interest has never fully cooled, and the case for Chelsea transfer news involving Leão makes real intuitive sense: the left flank has been a problem position for years, Mykhailo Mudryk has not nailed it down, and Leão represents exactly the kind of profile that could shift that conversation permanently.
The structural concern is Chelsea’s PSR position. Chelsea’s financial losses and PSR compliance situation mean that even a fee in the €60–75m range comes with significant constraints on the wages and amortisation structure that would surround it. That is not an insurmountable problem – Chelsea have shown creativity in structuring deals – but it is a genuine limiting factor that does not affect Arsenal in the same way.
There is also the question of system. Chelsea’s setup has been in flux, and there is no clear picture of how a Leão-type player integrates into their long-term structure in the way there is at Arsenal. The intent is real. The capacity and coherence are less certain.
Arsenal – The System, the Vacancy, and the Precise Tactical Fit
Arsenal are the right destination. The reasoning is specific, not sentimental – and it starts with a vacancy that Mikel Arteta has not yet filled convincingly.
PSG have been in direct talks over Gabriel Martinelli, and if that move progresses, Arsenal lose their first-choice left winger heading into a season where the margin for error has narrowed. Even if Martinelli stays, Arteta has been explicit about wanting more unpredictability in his attacking line – a player who can create something from nothing rather than executing within the structure. Leão is precisely that player.
The tactical fit is more nuanced than it first appears. Arsenal’s system under Arteta does demand defensive engagement from wide players – but it also gives attacking freedom in the final third that City, by contrast, does not. Arteta’s wingers are asked to press in specific windows and hold shape in others, with genuine licence to run at defenders when the ball is in the right zones. That is a system Leão can work within far more comfortably than Guardiola’s.
On the personal side, Leão named Arsenal specifically – alongside Manchester United – when asked on the Cernucci podcast which Premier League clubs he watches: “I like Arsenal also.” That is not a throwaway comment from a player about to commit to a new league. It is a signal of genuine preference.
Multiple reports suggest Milan quoted Arsenal a fee around £75m – notably less than the ~€100m Chelsea were told in previous windows. At that price, for a 26-year-old left winger who has shown the ceiling Leão has shown, Arsenal would be landing one of the most dynamic wide forwards in European football at a discount the market will not offer again.
The Verdict – One Number Changes Everything
The decisive variable here is not Leão’s personal preference, and it is not tactical fit – both of those point toward Arsenal. It is whether Milan publicly commit to the €50–60m range that has been reported, or whether they hold out for closer to €100m and give Chelsea and others time to make their move.
At €100m, this is a contested bidding situation and Chelsea’s history with the player becomes relevant. At €60m, Arsenal should be moving immediately and the argument for hesitation disappears. Milan need the money, Leão wants out, and Arteta has the system and the vacancy to use him properly. When the asking price drops to where it is reportedly heading, Arsenal would be foolish not to act first – and their rivals would be right to worry if they do.
































